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1. Joe Scarborough Reveals MSNBC Newsroom Booed Bush Speech MSNBC's Joe Scarborough revealed Thursday morning that on his first day at MSNBC, on the night of President Bush's 2003 State of the Union address, "people in the newsroom...were booing the President basically from the beginning to the end." A couple of minutes into his Morning Joe show, Scarborough praised the Executive Editor of the Seattle Times for scolding his staff for applauding Karl Rove's resignation. Scarborough then recalled: "My first night here at MSNBC was the President's State of the Union address in 2003, and I was shocked because there were actually people in the newsroom that were booing the President basically from the beginning to the end." In doing so, they were just following the tradition set in 2000 when those at the NBC News flagship were on election night 2000 openly, according the then-General Electric Chairman Jack Welch, "all cheering for Gore." 2. Begala Ridicules Limbaugh: 'Maybe It Was Just OxyContin Talking' In a panel discussion on Thursday's The Situation Room, CNN's "from the Left" commentator Paul Begala launched another personal attack on Rush Limbaugh based on the talk radio host's past drug addiction. Near the close of the 4pm EDT hour of the CNN program, Begala and former U.S. Representative J.C. Watts discussed Rudy Giuliani and the possible factor of his family life in his presidential bid. Begala attacked the GOP, charging that the party "has made a practice of going after people's families," and then singled out Limbaugh for doing this (though Limbaugh has never officially worked for the Republicans). "Not just attacking Bill Clinton, we remember Rush Limbaugh attacking Chelsea Clinton. Maybe it was just the OxyContin talking." 3. CBS's Bill Plante Defends 'Smart-Assed' Rove Question Admitting it was "smart-assed," CBS News White House correspondent Bill Plante nonetheless defended his now-infamous "If he's so smart, how come you lost Congress?" quip from Monday's White House South Lawn ceremony with President Bush to officially announce Karl Rove's resignation. Interviewed by CBSNews.com's "Public Eye" blogger Matthew Felling, Plante did concede that he welcomes scrutiny of how the press functions, especially in live press conference settings. Said Plante at the open of his interview: "Anytime you challenge or appear to challenge the President -- and I don't care if the President is a Republican or a Democrat -- there are people who will take issue with it and tell you it's inappropriate. And you kind of expect that. I knew that was I did on Monday was smart-assed, but I think that that's beside the point." Joe Scarborough Reveals MSNBC Newsroom Booed Bush Speech MSNBC's Joe Scarborough revealed Thursday morning that on his first day at MSNBC, on the night of President Bush's 2003 State of the Union address, "people in the newsroom...were booing the President basically from the beginning to the end." A couple of minutes into his Morning Joe show, Scarborough praised the Executive Editor of the Seattle Times for scolding his staff for applauding Karl Rove's resignation. Scarborough then recalled: "My first night here at MSNBC was the President's State of the Union address in 2003, and I was shocked because there were actually people in the newsroom that were booing the President basically from the beginning to the end." In doing so, they were just following the tradition set in 2000 when those at the NBC News flagship were on election night 2000 openly, according the then-General Electric Chairman Jack Welch, "all cheering for Gore." The August 16 CyberAlert recounted: In an e-mail to his staff, Seattle Times Executive Editor Dave Boardman reported that in Monday's news meeting about planned story assignments, "when word came in of Karl Rove's resignation, several people in the meeting started cheering." In quite an understatement, Boardman scolded: "That sort of expression is simply not appropriate for a newsroom." Boardman conceded the display matched the overall politics at the paper: "If we wore our politics on our sleeves in here, I have no doubt that in this and in most other mainstream newsrooms in America, the majority of those sleeves would be of the same color: blue....That is not particularly surprising, given how people make career decisions and that social service and activism is a primary driver for many journalists." See: www.mrc.org
At about 6:02am EDT on Thursday, August 16, Scarborough related, as he sat across from news reader Mika Brzezinksi:
Mark Finkelstein of the MRC's NewsBusters blog caught Scarborough's disclosure and posted an item on Thursday morning: media.newsbusters.org As the MRC's Rich Noyes reminded me, the MRC's August 31, 2001 CyberAlert recounted: On the election night, the NBC News control room was full of people "all cheering for Gore," retiring General Electric CEO Jack Welch told Vanity Fair as he denied he pressured anyone to call the election for Bush, "and two or three of us cheering for George Bush." Welch's revelation about the candidate preference of most NBC News staffers came in reaction to, as the Names & Faces column in the August 29 Washington Post reported, "rumors that he asked the men supervising computer projections, 'What would I have to give you to call the race for Bush?' Rep. Henry Waxman, a California Democrat, is threatening to subpoena a video recording of that night from NBC." (General Electric owns NBC.) The Post quoted Welch as calling that "a crazy story." An August 28 Reuters dispatch quoted from the interview in the upcoming October issue of Vanity Fair as Welch, apparently referring to at least NBC News President Andy Lack, maintained: "To think you could ever influence two old pros who wouldn't call an election for anyone if their lives depended on it, is just plain silliness. The facts are there was a room there (at NBC on election night) of young kids all cheering for Gore and two or three of us cheering for George Bush. That's all that happened." As anyone who has seen appearances by Welch on C-SPAN knows, he describes his 20-something and 30-something employees as "young kids."
Begala Ridicules Limbaugh: 'Maybe It Was Just OxyContin Talking' In a panel discussion on Thursday's The Situation Room, CNN's "from the Left" commentator Paul Begala launched another personal attack on Rush Limbaugh based on the talk radio host's past drug addiction. Near the close of the 4pm EDT hour of the CNN program, Begala and former U.S. Representative J.C. Watts discussed Rudy Giuliani and the possible factor of his family life in his presidential bid. Begala attacked the GOP, charging that the party "has made a practice of going after people's families," and then singled out Limbaugh for doing this (though Limbaugh has never officially worked for the Republicans). "Not just attacking Bill Clinton, we remember Rush Limbaugh attacking Chelsea Clinton. Maybe it was just the OxyContin talking." Nine months ago, during CNN's election night programming, Begala slammed Limbaugh as a "drug-addled gasbag who is self discredited." See: www.mrc.org [This item is based on Matthew Balan's item posted Thursday evening on MRC's blog, Newsbusters.org: newsbusters.org ] The discussion on the August 16 Situation Room anchored by Miles O'Brien:
SOUNDBITE OF RUDY GIULIANI: And the best thing I can say is, kind of leave my family alone. You know? Just like I'll leave your family alone. And if you want to judge me, you want to judge me, or I want to judge you, we judge each other on our public performance. I don't know your -- I don't know your private life. You don't know my private life.
CBS's Bill Plante Defends 'Smart-Assed' Rove Question Admitting it was "smart-assed," CBS News White House correspondent Bill Plante nonetheless defended his now-infamous "If he's so smart, how come you lost Congress?" quip from Monday's White House South Lawn ceremony with President Bush to officially announce Karl Rove's resignation. Interviewed by CBSNews.com's "Public Eye" blogger Matthew Felling, Plante did concede that he welcomes scrutiny of how the press functions, especially in live press conference settings. Said Plante at the open of his interview: "Anytime you challenge or appear to challenge the President -- and I don't care if the President is a Republican or a Democrat -- there are people who will take issue with it and tell you it's inappropriate. And you kind of expect that. I knew that was I did on Monday was smart-assed, but I think that that's beside the point."
[This item was adapted from a Thursday afternoon post from Ken Shepherd to the MRC's blog, NewsBusters.org: newsbusters.org ] Below is an excerpt of the PublicEye interview:
Matthew Felling: "Interesting week. Anything surprise you?"
For full interview, go to: www.cbsnews.com
-- Brent Baker
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